I'm struggling with excepting this as a honest response, if I was to be honest myself. I find it hard to believe that someone who spent an exorbitant amount of money or whatever on an 'brand new' product would be more than happy to accept obvious QA flaws. That now said, I will of course accept you response as the truth, because I have never seen anything on the forum from you that would lead me to believe you'd be dishonest in the slightest.
I wish I could add that I think you're better man than I for being so nonchalant about such matters. Unfortunately I really do think those who set their own standards should adhere to them. The TV in my example should have been caught by QA, just like the blem on the table. To let that stuff slide, allows manufacturers to sell at a preminum but produce haphazard.
If I were to spin another example. Lets pretend you bought yourself a custom cue from whoever is the top dog these days. Waited a year to receive it. On the day you open up the package you find that the maker grossly oversized a pocket for 1 of 6 of the matching inlays and made up the difference with epoxy. Still content...? Obviously the horrible inlay work would not effect function of the cue, but anyone simply rolling cue from a distance will see the bad work.
I'm not meaning to test you here. Just get a sense of your stance on the general matter. I think maybe I'm simply not using an example that rings home for you.
If we review the original post, we can see that the OP simply inquired about other people's experiences with Diamond product. At no point, did Nyquil seem emotional to me at least. If companies are truly worried about their supposed 'good' image then they need to step up prior to releasing evidence to contrary. A good company should not rely on or presume that their cilents should handle PR for them. If you want to be considered the top of the heap, then you should and expect your customers to hold you to the highest standard.
Once again, I think if you could filter out the inflammatory posts and subsequent responses spawned by RKC, this thread would be countless pages shorter, and nothing but reassurance in the believe that Diamond would look after their customer.
I thought Diamonds were made to order...? Hense the 50% to build, 50% before delivery. Made to order products don't generally get 'assembly line quality QA'. I know that the company I work for keeps binders of QA checks on every machine we build, and I spend a week trying to break it before it ships. Image is everything, and we know it.
No drama posting by anyone other than the self appointed head cheerleader imo.
Thanks for the well thought out response.